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London, Manchester, Edinburgh, [add your location here] and all surrounding areas.

The UK is expensive. Also from today's Guardian: http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2016/feb/16/cost-of-...

with people in the comments claiming a nursery place is 1000 pounds a month which sounds right based on what friends tell me, compared to out capped ~£250 a month in Norway where everyone screams about high taxation but where the cost of living and quality of life are (probably) much higher.




It is an average of £28,000 per year to send two children to nursery in London [0]. In stark contrast, the cheapest house in central Bradford was £29,000 [1], and last year 120 homes in Liverpool were sold (with conditions attached) for £1 each [2].

[0] http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/bills/article-2385465/How...

[1] http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/sep/02/housing-marke...

[2] http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-merseyside-34474378


I live in Aberdeen, and you can definitely add Aberdeen and the surrouding -shire to that list. With the ongoing and very deep cutbacks happening in the oil industry, the prices have stabilised a little, but don't appear to have dropped any.

From speaking with friends and acquaintances with whom I went to Uni, it appears there's a pretty predictable pattern to housing costs: anywhere there's reasonably plentiful work, prices are very high. It's cheap to live in Stoke-on-Trent or Ayr, but good luck getting a job that pays much more than minimum, if you can find even that.


Agreed, cost of living in the UK (not just London) is steadily climbing while quality-of-life is dropping through the floor.


Interestingly that's not the cases everywhere in the UK. for example Dumfries and Galloway saw a 10% drop in property prices last year...


Presumably because no one wants to live in Dumfries and Galloway. That's not meant to be a slant against the place -- I don't think I've ever been there -- but the price will drop if there's a decrease in demand with flat/rising supply.


Whilst other areas are expensive London it totally in a league of it's own.

Edinburgh (most expensive part of scotland) average property price £234k. London, average property price £642k

Also people in Scotland and areas like Manchester can more easily get on the property ladder by buying in cheaper nearby areas. for Edinburgh places like West Lothian (average price £164K) make a much easier starting point.

Heck with improving internet access, if you can do your job remotely the western isles are nice and cheap (average price around £100k)

For me the UKs property market is heavily split between London and the south east and "the rest of the country", a lot of the stories about expensive UK property don't seem to cover those aspects.


Prices in many parts of the UK have been more or less static since 2008, and in some cities they've actually fallen.

The hot spots are all "capital" cities for their catchment areas.

>if you can do your job remotely the western isles are nice and cheap

I've considered this, but I decided that moving to Europe is a better idea, for cultural and political reasons.

Also, it doesn't rain nearly as much; climate change is going to flood/rot a lot of the UK's housing stock and infrastructure over the next few decades, and I'd rather be somewhere hotter and drier.


its own!




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